Buller's Albatrosses or Buller's Mollymawks

Buller's Albatross or Buller's Mollymawk, Thalassarche bulleri, is a small mollymawk in the albatross family. It breeds on islands around New Zealand, and feeds in the seas off Australia and the South Pacific.

Description

Buller's Albatross averages 79 cm (31 in) in length.

It has a silver-grey forehead, a grey head and throat. It has a black patch around the eyes with a white crescent behind and below the eye. Its back, upperwing, and tail are dark grey, and its rump and underparts are white. Its underwing is white with a blcak tip, with a broad sharply demarcated dark band at the leading edge. Its bill is large and black with yellow on the upper mandible (bill), and the tip.

The nest is mound of soil, grass and roots and is set into depressions in the breeding area. Breeding begins in December.

Eggs on the Snares are laid in late January (around the 21-23 of January). incubation lasts around 60 days, with both parents sharing the responsibility. The average incubation shift is around 10 days. After hatching it takes 170 days to fledge the chick.

They breed annually.

Range and habitat

Buller's Albatross is endemic to New Zealand. They breed on Snares Islands, Solander Island, Chatham Islands(Big and Little Sister and Forty-fours Island), Rosemary Rock, Three Kings Islands. Adults forage between 40°S and 50°S from Tasmania to the Chatham Rise. Juveniles and adults that aren't breeding breed across the South Pacific with a number feeding every year in the Humboldt Current off Chile and Peru.

Conservation

It was formerly classified as Vulnerable species by the IUCN. But new research has shown it to be not as rare as it was believed. Consequently, it is downlisted to Near Threatened status in 2008 It has an occurrence range of 16,100,000 km2 (6,200,000 sq mi) and a breeding range of 4 km2 (1.5 sq mi). According to a 1999 estimate, there are 64,000 birds and there are 31,939 breeding adults. These are located as follows: 8,877 pairs on Snares Islands, 4,912 pairs on Solander Island, 16,000 pairs on Forty-fours Island, 2,130 pairs on Big and Little Sister, 20 pairs on Rosemary Rock and Three Kings Islands.

The Snares Islands population has been increasing, but lately not as much as in the 1970s, whereas the Solander Island population which was stable from 1986 to 1955 has now shown about an 18% increase. Survivale rate of adults on Snares Islands increased to 95.5% and brooding success rate was 70.8%, whereas on Big and Little Sister, adult survival rate is 93.5% and the brooding success rate is between 57-60%.

Buller's Albatross is the most common bycatch from longline fisheries out of New Zealand, and, even though net-sonde cables were banned in 1992, squid trawlers still catch them. Finally, WekaGallirallus australis was introduced to Big Sister and may take eggs and chicks.

Most islands are legally protected, except for the Chatham Islands colonies which are on private land.

Taxonomy

Mollymawks are a type of Albatross that belong to Diomedeidae family and come from the Procellariiformes order, along with Shearwaters, Fulmars, Storm-petrels and Diving-petrels. They share certain identifying features. First, they have nasal passages that attach to the upper bill called naricorns. Although the nostrils on the Albatross are on the sides of the bill. The bills of Procellariiformes are also unique in that they are split into between 7 and 9 horny plates. Finally, they produce a stomach oil made up of wax esters and triglycerides that is stored in the proventriculus (stomach). This is used against predators as well as an energy rich food source for chicks and for the adults during their long flights. They also have a salt gland that is situated above the nasal passage and helps desalinate their bodies, due to the high amount of ocean water that they imbibe. It excretes a high saline solution from their nose.

In 1998, Robertson and Nunn split this species into two, Thalassarche (bulleri) bulleri, and Thalassarche (bulleri) platei The majority of authorities including ITIS, James Clements, BirdLife International, Michael Brooke.

Etymology

It was named for the New Zealand ornithologist Walter Buller.

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